Yes the County Judge screwed up.
The fact of the matter is, although possibly naive, SB went on what the Judge with the authority over (and presumably the most intimate knowledege of) the situation said.
The county attorney had to have known that Bonfire planned to be burned and likely knew the why SB thought it had the go ahead. We're talking about all county employees here. It's not like the Bryan DA filed the suit. SB got permission from a county official, and then another county official filed the injunction.
Therefore, his timing is clearly suspect. The injunction was filed with the intent to stop Bonfire, not to get the County Commissioners to jump through the technical legal hoops to allow it.
Let's not go off the deep end about being compared with Tech until we know what's going to happen. It sounds like the county was on board in the first place, so hopefully they still are.
EDIT:
Real Deal,
The only way I would agree with your position is if the County Commissioners had to be under a court order in order to call an emergency meeting. I'm sure that for reasons we can't even begin to think about, it's important that the exception to the ban be legally sound.
However, if the CC's didn't have to be under court order to meet, he could accomplish the same thing simply by having them call an emergency meeting. If that's the case, then clearly his intentions are hardly above reproach.
[This message has been edited by Longtime Lurker (edited 11/18/2005 4:36p).]